The UPSC has informed a parliamentary panel that the one-year duration of the Civil Services Examination (CSE) cannot be reduced.
The UPSC cited maintaining confidentiality and integrity as key factors in determining the examination schedule.
In 2023, the preliminary examination was held at 79 centres with 2,538 venues for 10.27 lakh candidates.
The parliamentary panel recommended a comprehensive re-examination of the civil services recruitment framework.
Detailed Insights:
The UPSC has optimized the CSE time cycle as much as possible, considering the increase in candidates and examination centers.
The evaluation of descriptive-type answer scripts takes over two months due to nearly 1.2 lakh answer sheets being evaluated by experts.
The parliamentary panel urged the Department of Personnel and Training to implement the Baswan Committee’s reforms, which addressed issues like high absenteeism.
The panel suggested releasing the preliminary exam answer key after the exam to allow candidates to raise objections, but the UPSC releases it after the entire process.
The UPSC uses a Question Paper Representation Portal (QPRep) for candidates to submit feedback on questions.
The UPSC stated that the current system of disclosing answer keys after the final result works well and doesn't require change.
The matter of answer keys is currently sub judice in the Supreme Court.
Key Concepts Involved:
UPSC (Union Public Service Commission): India's central agency responsible for conducting civil services examinations.
Civil Services Examination (CSE): A competitive exam for recruitment to various civil services of the Government of India.
Baswan Committee: An expert panel formed to review issues related to the Civil Services Examination.